A
weeklong buzz around mysterious "please help us Mrs. Nixon" posters
in downtown Toronto culminated today at the Royal Bank of Canada's (RBC)
headquarters, where Rainforest Action Network (RAN) dropped a 15' x 30' banner
appealing to Janet Nixon, the wife of CEO Gordon Nixon. Protestors scaled the
50' flagpole at the main entrance to the RBC headquarters on Bay and
Wellington, replacing the flags with the 15' banner, which hung for 2.5 hours
as employees, including Gordon Nixon, arrived for work at the bank. The banner
and the posters asked for Mrs. Nixon's help to end the company's involvement
with destructive tar sands financing. RBC is the largest financier of the tar
sands expansion in Alberta, Canada's fastest growing source of water pollution
and global warming emissions. Two Indigenous Canadian women climbers were
ticketed by the Toronto Police for hanging the banner.

Today's
banner and posters are linked to the launch of an Internet video featuring
Michael Brune, executive director of RAN. In the one-minute video, available
at pleasehelpusmrsnixon.com, Brune appeals to Mrs. Nixon, asking for her
help in pushing RBC to end investments in tar sands and to take a leadership
role in funding a clean energy future. The video has been sent to more
than 70,000 people who have been asked to send the message to RBC's corporate
social responsibility department.

Rainforest
Action Network is appealing to Mrs. Nixon, a committed environmentalist and the
first lady of RBC, to lend her strong and influential voice to those fighting
to protect Canada's clean water and ensure Canada meets its climate
commitments, which are threatened by the tar sands," said Michael Brune,
executive director of RAN. "RBC has a critical role to play in investing
in Canada's clean energy future. The health of Canada's Indigenous peoples,
vital water resources and air quality need Mr. and Mrs. Nixon's help."

Today's
protest highlights the stark contrast between RBC's status as the top financier
of the Alberta tar sands, and the company's PR promises to promote clean water.
Last year, RBC launched their Blue Water Project, an initiative "committed
to donating $50 million toward global fresh water initiatives over the next ten
years." In contrast to the $3 million dollars actually released in water
quality improvement donations under the program in the first year, RBC made
$2.2 billion in loans in 2007 alone to oil and gas companies operating in the
Alberta tar sands, one of Canada's largest sources of water pollution.

"As
a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, the Tar Sands are destroying
our traditional ways of life and the future of our community," said Eriel
Deranger, an Indigenous Canadian and a RAN campaigner who is one of the
climbers in today's protest. "RBC touts its commitment to clean
water, but is a leading financier of Canada's most polluting industries. It's
time for RBC to be a true leader and stop bankrolling the tar
sands."

Extraction
of oil from the Alberta tar sands is a major threat to climate change, resulting
in three times more global warming-causing greenhouse gas emissions than
conventional oil. Tar sands development is turning once-pristine stretches of
forest into desolate, post-apocalyptic landscapes and producing toxic pollution
that is harmful to the health and quality of life of the region's First
Nations.